+Vote!
Chicago Tribune (Free subscription) | 8 hours ago
A federal judge overseeing Guantanamo Bay lawsuits ordered the Justice Department to put other cases aside and make it clear throughout the Bush administration that, after nearly seven years of detention, the detainees must have their day in court.
1Vote!
USA Today (Free subscription) | 9 hours ago
A federal judge overseeing Guantanamo Bay lawsuits ordered the Justice Department to put other cases aside and make it clear ...
+Vote!
Alternet (Free subscription) | 1 hour ago
Infighting and political grandstanding are holding up measures to close the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay.
+Vote!
Boston Globe (Free subscription) | yesterday
Bush administration lawyers are heading to court to begin defending an estimated 200 lawsuits by Guantanamo Bay detainees.
+Vote!
Firedoglake (Free subscription) | 6 hours ago
We all fail. It's men like Hogan who redeem both themselves and their country. And do so with stylish snark and sarcasm.
+Vote!
OTB News (Free subscription) | 7 hours ago
A federal judge overseeing Guantanamo Bay lawsuits ordered the Justice Department to put other cases aside and make it clear …
+Vote!
OTB News (Free subscription) | 7 hours ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. federal judge said on Tuesday he would be concerned and suspicious if the Bush administration delayed cases brought by Guantanamo Bay prisoners seeking their release.
+Vote!
The Shebeen (Free subscription) | 8 hours ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. federal judge said on Tuesday he would be concerned and suspicious if the Bush administration delayed cases brought by...
+Vote!
Star Tribune (Free subscription) | 8 hours ago
About 200 lawyers, law clerks and reporters sat through the nearly three-hour court hearing. Other lawyers joined by phone for the historic hearing. Attorneys, nearly all of them working for free, have long asked for a judge to scrutinize the evidence, saying the detainees could not be held indefinitely, simply on the government's say-so.
+Vote!
Florida Sun Sentinel (Free subscription) | 8 hours ago
A federal judge overseeing Guantanamo Bay lawsuits ordered the Justice Department to put other cases aside and make it clear throughout the Bush administration that, after nearly seven years of detention, the detainees must have their day in court.
+Vote!
Reuters (Free subscription) | 9 hours ago
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. federal judge said on Tuesday he would be concerned and suspicious if the Bush administration delayed cases brought by Guantanamo Bay prisoners seeking their release.
3Vote!
Philadelphia Inquirer (Free subscription) | 1 hour ago
WASHINGTON - A federal judge overseeing Guantanamo Bay lawsuits ordered the Justice Department yesterday to put other cases aside and to make clear throughout the Bush administration that, after nearly seven years, the detainees must have their day in court.
+Vote!
OTB News (Free subscription) | yesterday
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) — U.S. military tribunals at Guantanamo Bay resume this week even as new legal challenges could throw the system into further turmoil….
+Vote!
TPMmuckraker (Free subscription) | yesterday
From the Miami Herald: GUANTANAMO BAY NAVY BASE, Cuba -- The U.S. government is blocking the American Civil Liberties Union from paying attorneys representing suspected terrorists held here, insisting that the ACLU must first receive a license from the U.S....
+Vote!
How Appealing (Free subscription) | yesterday
"US war crimes court to resume at Guantanamo": The Associated Press provides this report. And Carol Rosenberg of The Miami Herald has a news update headlined "ACLU: Treasury Dept. is stonewalling Gitmo attorneys."...
+Vote!
cherylt | 05/01/2008
So, Neil Patrick Harris triumphs with a pithy turn in the stoner adventure , Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay . But how can anyone call his no-basis-in-reality debauched former child star portrayal an Oscar worthy self-parody? "To the delight of fans and critics alike, he reprises his turn as Neil Patrick Harris, a doped-up, egomaniacal, prostitute-loving, unicorn-riding narcissist wielding...
7Vote!
raimondo | 04/03/2008
The New Issue: ‘Passio’ New Porn Flick Finds Religion Dark Alley Media’s first foray into controversial cinema brought us Gaytanamo , a gleeful mockery of the government’s war on terror and the Guantanamo prisons. Now the mischievous movie makers are dipping their toes into the wild world of religion. And, not surprisingly, they’re going to get some shocks, gasps and, hopefully, moans. James Withers